Yes, they should all be at the same voltage all the time. If you have a
problem with the light and the battery went flat then the new battery will
probably fail soom as well, the real cause of the problem being elsewhere.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Lysander Meath Baker" <lysander@meathbaker.org>
To: "MG List" <mgs@autox.team.net>
Sent: Wednesday, April 02, 2003 4:15 PM
Subject: FW: Eletrical Gremlins
> It was late at night and I fiddled with the key until the light went out,
> but I still had a flat battery in the morning. 5 year old battery wasn't
> taking much charge so I've installed a new one & all seems fine, but I'm
> assuming I had a loose connection that will reappear next time it would be
> most inconvenient.
>
> What does "Next time you start it check the voltage on a brown at the
> fusebox" mean? Does it mean a (any?) brown wire?
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